This article was first posted on the Guardian's Comment is free
Glaciers in
The report, Climate change knows no borders, provides a chilling reminder of the catastrophic impacts of climate ... more »
Promoting debate about Latin America and the Caribbean
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Monday, July 14
by
Guy Edwards
on Mon 14 Jul 2008 13:31 BST
This article was first posted on the Guardian's Comment is free
Glaciers in The report, Climate change knows no borders, provides a chilling reminder of the catastrophic impacts of climate ... more » Friday, June 13
by
Enrique Mendizabal
on Fri 13 Jun 2008 17:34 BST
This article was first posted in the ODI Blog
I’ve been talking about the importance of inequality to everyone in Wednesday, May 28
by
Ana Ramirez
on Wed 28 May 2008 10:53 BST
The first semester of 2008 saw the real price of the main food staples climb to a 30 year peak. The food riots in Haiti and the highly politicized “Sovereignty and Food Security: Food for Life” Presidential Summit held in Managua, Nicaragua on the May 7th have brought issues of trade, international aid and crisis mechanisms to the forefront of the regional political and economic agenda. Growing concern over food security and price vulnerability was clearly reflected by the Summit’s call for a regional production and distribution strategy for fairly priced food as well as for a review ... more » Saturday, May 17
by
Guy Edwards
on Sat 17 May 2008 18:38 BST
This weekend, heads of state and government officials will
descend on
That’s where the Foreign and ... more » Monday, May 12
by
Guy Edwards
on Mon 12 May 2008 17:42 BST
From the 16-17th May, European, Latin American and Caribbean Heads of State and Government will congregate in To mark this occasion, Canning House, Tuesday, April 22
by
Ana Ramirez
on Tue 22 Apr 2008 00:07 BST
With a 7.9 score on the Richter scale, the earthquake which struck Peru on the 15th August 2007 shook up the country’s entire natural disaster response system. The magnitude of the event revealed the institutional and logistical limitations of Peru’s crisis response system particularly at the regional level. The international community has been seeking to improve the capacity, predictability and accountability of humanitarian response processes through the implementation of the cluster approach. Approved by the IASC in 2005, it seeks to concentrate expertise, coordinate action and foster partnerships by grouping humanitarian organisations of the same field under the leadership of ... more » Monday, October 8
by
Enrique Mendizabal
on Mon 08 Oct 2007 15:23 BST
Comercio y Pobreza en Latinoamérica (COPLA) aims to use research based evidence to strengthen and promote an improved dialogue between policymakers, researchers and those institutions that represent the poor to incorporate new issues into the policy debate. A couple of years ago, when the Free Trade Agreement between the US and Peru was still being negotiated, a friend who had worked in the Peruvian Ministry of Trade and had been involved in the negotiations told me that studies about the effects of the agreement on poverty had been commissioned but not been made public. Why? Because they ... more » Tuesday, August 21
by
Lauren Phillips
on Tue 21 Aug 2007 10:05 BST
Amid announcements that Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez is seeking indefinite terms for the presidency and thereby further undermining what remains of Venezuelan democracy, comes more moves to shore up support from leftist / anti-American leaders the world over… this time, very close to home, in London. more »
Thursday, August 9
by
Aaron Goldfarb
on Thu 09 Aug 2007 15:39 BST
Tough Times Ahead for Argentina’s Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner Aaron Goldfarb 8 August 2007 After presiding over an impressive fifth year of economic expansion in Argentina, President Nestor Kirchner could have easily won a second term in the upcoming October elections. Instead, Kirchner is stepping aside to let his wife, Cristina Fernandez, seek the presidency. Cristina, who has often been compared to Hilary Clinton, has been a leading figure in the Senate for the past four years. Though her approval rating is not as high as her husband’s, Cristina (as she likes to be known) is still heavily favoured ... more » Thursday, July 26
by
Aaron Goldfarb
on Thu 26 Jul 2007 15:15 BST
Costa Rica switched diplomatic relations from Taiwan to Mainland China earlier this month, citing economic reasons as the deciding factor. Costa Rica’s realignment is a small example of how Chinese "checkbook diplomacy" is reshaping Latin American politics. By financing multi-billion dollar infrastructure and public works projects in Latin America, China is receiving contracts for raw materials and foodstuffs that will feed the appetite of its ever expanding economy. On his 2005 tour, President Hu Jintao spoke of a US$100 billion investment in South American infrastructure over the next ten years. Clearly, China is laying the path for a long-lasting presence ... more » Tuesday, July 17
by
Lauren Phillips
on Tue 17 Jul 2007 10:44 BST
Argentine president Nestor Kirchner announced this month that he would not run for re-election in order to put forward his wife, Senator Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, as a presidential candidate. Unlike the wives of Juan Peron, Kirchner is an accomplished politician who has served both in the lower house of Congress and now the Senate. Many are comparing her to Hillary Clinton – both are lawyers, both were involved in policy making during their husbands presidency and both are notable politicians in their own right. more »
Wednesday, July 11
by
Lauren Phillips
on Wed 11 Jul 2007 10:14 BST
The World Bank released its annual “governance indicators” yesterday – a set of six variables which is designed to measure governance globally. The project has many critics, broadly falling into two camps – those that oppose the idea on principle and argue that the World Bank should not be in the business of rating countries on governance or any other metric, and those that find fault with the indicators methodology, which could accurately be described as a “kitchen sink” approach to measuring corruption, political stability and other categories of governance with surveys and other imprecise metrics.... more » Tuesday, July 10
by
Lauren Phillips
on Tue 10 Jul 2007 09:34 BST
After US President George W. Bush’s long trip to Latin America this spring, the US has announced a number of very small humanitarian and aid initiatives for the region which appear like buy-offs to the uninitiated. Dedicating just $20 million (the cost of a single day of the continuing Iraqi war), the US has put a large hospital ship off the coast of several Central American cities in an effort to buy popularity. One can’t help but notice how much this mini-mission has in common with the itinerant Cuban doctors working in Venezuela. more »
Friday, July 6
by
Samir Elhawary
on Fri 06 Jul 2007 11:07 BST
In December 2005, Wednesday, July 4
by
Aaron Goldfarb
on Wed 04 Jul 2007 15:48 BST
The bill that proposed a pathway to citizenship for the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants in the United States now lays dead on the Senate floor, where it will likely stay until after the 2008 presidential election. Latin American leaders expressed their disappointment, with Mexican President Felipe Calderon calling the Senate’s defeat of the bill, “a grave error” and Salvadorian President Elias Antonio Saca labelling the bill’s demise, “a pity”. Yet a much more incensed tone arose from the Latin American press. An op-ed in the Mexican newspaper La Jornada placed responsibility on the shoulders of President Bush, ... more » Sunday, May 20
by
Enrique Mendizabal
on Sun 20 May 2007 21:04 BST
When DFID withdrew their bilateral programmes in Wednesday, April 11
by
Enrique Mendizabal
on Wed 11 Apr 2007 21:21 BST
Working at the regional level poses a series of challenges for donors. DFID’s Regional Assistance Plan (RAP) in Tuesday, March 27
by
Laura Jarque
on Tue 27 Mar 2007 10:01 BST
The volume of remittances hit the headlines last week on the BBC and One World websites. The BBC reported that remittances to Latin America are now $62bn, more than aid and foreign direct investment combined. This figure has attracted the interest of development policymakers. How, they ask, can remittances be harnessed as an effective development tool? The answer is as yet unknown. What we do know is that the majority of migrants send home small amounts, around $100 to $150 a month. Charges are incurred per transaction meaning remittances are big business. One current line of inquiry is what governments ... more » Friday, March 16
by
Penelope Anthias
on Fri 16 Mar 2007 23:07 GMT
To date, the Juntos programme has been the most ambitious
and innovative government attempt at tackling childhood poverty in
Monday, March 12
by
Penelope Anthias
on Mon 12 Mar 2007 15:58 GMT
To those who, like myself, had assumed that Telesur was
merely an outlet for pro-Chavez propaganda, this talk by James Painter of the
BBC World Service revealed some surprising and some not-so-surprising facts
about this Caracas-based pan-Latin American TV network. In fact, Telesur is not
owned exclusively by Monday, March 5
by
Penelope Anthias
on Mon 05 Mar 2007 12:35 GMT
In this conference organised by LSE’s Peruvian Society, speakers reflected on how the new political map of Latin America is influencing Sunday, February 25
by
Penelope Anthias
on Sun 25 Feb 2007 15:19 GMT
There has been a surge of recent interest in China’s impact on developing countries, but far more of this discussion has focused on Africa than on Latin America. This is partly because the consequences of China's growth for Latin America are likely to be both more complex and less direct. Unlike Africa, the Latin American resource sector is dominated by large state-owned companies and how these will interact with new Chinese investment is hard to predict. A more developed infrastructure also means China will have less of a competitive advantage in the race to exploit Latin America’s natural resources.
In Latin America, there are likely to be both winners and losers, as a recent report by the
more »
Friday, February 16
by
Lauren Phillips
on Fri 16 Feb 2007 09:22 GMT
Rafael Correa, There are ... more » Tuesday, February 13
by
Lauren Phillips
on Tue 13 Feb 2007 10:00 GMT
Attending a conference last week at Chatham House on political risk, I was faced with the most surprising statistic: Pemex and PDVSA are the third and fourth largest companies in the world, respectively. The presenter, Dr. Harm Bandholz of UniCredit Markets and Investment Banking, informed us that the Mexican and Venezuelan state oil companies were recently ranked by the Financial Times as third and fourth largest companies in the world on the basis of total assets when both state owned and public companies were compared. This makes both larger than General Electric, and lagging behind only ... more » Thursday, February 8
by
Penelope Anthias
on Thu 08 Feb 2007 11:16 GMT
Wednesday, February 7
by
Penelope Anthias
on Wed 07 Feb 2007 23:37 GMT
In this talk, hosted by the Institute for the Study of the Americas
(ISA), independent consultant and journalist Colin Harding offered an insightful
analysis of the 2006 presidential elections in
Friday, February 2
by
Lauren Phillips
on Fri 02 Feb 2007 13:00 GMT
Former Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari (1988-1994) was in London this week giving a talk on NAFTA at the London Business School. The argument of his presentation was that NAFTA was intended to be an instrument to making the Mexican economy more competitive and robust, not an end in and of itself. He presented a number of statistics which demonstrated that Mexico had lost competitiveness in the decade since NAFTA on a number of metrics, and was highly critical of the lack of progress in reforming the Mexican economy further during the Zedillo and Fox administrations... more »
by
Lauren Phillips
on Fri 02 Feb 2007 12:50 GMT
The Latin American trading arrangements just got more complex as Colombia and the US moved one step closer to signing a free trade agreement (FTA), despite the US Congress’ increasingly anti-free trade stance. The agreement follows on a raft of recent Latin American free trade agreements including the US – Peru FTA, the US - Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), which later incorporated the Dominican Republic as a member, and the Chilean – US agreement signed in 2002. The US was also negotiating a free trade agreement with Ecuador until 2006... more »
Wednesday, January 31
by
Massimiliano Cali
on Wed 31 Jan 2007 21:46 GMT
After a year of record gas revenues in 2006, A new ODI Opinion argues that this is unlikely to be the case and that Evo Morales is actually departing from Chavez-type policy-making, acting more pragmatically and to some ... more » Thursday, January 25
by
Penelope Anthias
on Thu 25 Jan 2007 13:21 GMT
In last week’s blog, I discussed the collapse the Doha round of trade talks and Brazil’s leading role in these negotiations. This week's blog looks at progress on other free trade agreements in Latin America and asks, who really stands to benefit from trade liberalization?
FTAA, bilateral FTAs and regional integration
Doha is not the only recent example of trade talks collapsing after failed negotiations. In 2005, the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA) floundered over similar issues to Doha: the US was seeking to expand trade in services and increase intellectual property rights, while Latin American countries pushed for an end to agricultural subsidies and freer trade in agricultural goods. Again, Brazil’s role in negotiations was crucial and it’s opposition at the Mar de Plata Summit in January 2005 played a large part in blocking a deal. There is some speculation that reaching a last-minute agreement over the Doha round could pave the way for a revival of the FTAA, but the terms of any negotiations would most likely be very different... more »
Saturday, January 20
by
Penelope Anthias
on Sat 20 Jan 2007 12:33 GMT
With collapse of the Doha round, the cancellation of FTAA and the uneven progress on a number of bilateral and regional agreements, the issue of trade in Latin America is hanging in the balance. The future depends partly on the success or failure of last-ditch attempts to revive the Doha round currently being made by Brazil, the US and the EU and several other large developing countries. However, even in the unlikely event of an agreement being reached before July, the progress and nature of free trade agreements (FTAs) in Latin America remains uncertain. Not only is the multilateral trading system in a fragile state, but opposition to FTAs from social movements across the region remains widespread. One thing that does seem fairly certain is that Brazil – a key player in the Doha negotiations - will continue to have a leading role in future trade negotiations in Latin America... more »
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